SPORTS Getting His Kicks Kickboxing champion Ken Levy wants to help others improve their fitness and self-defense ability MIKE ROSENBAUM Sports Writer ate last year, Ken Levy was confused. A mental health worker at Kings- wood Hospital, he was also an undefeated kickboxer who- owned the Michigan lightweight championship. And he was a man in search of a future. Levy finally found what he was looking for while training at the CMI health club in Southfield. "I used to, once in a while, come into the aerobics classes," he recalls. "And I realized we were using a lot of the same muscles" as in kickboxing. Levy turned that realization into what he calls kaerobics, a combination of martial arts and aerobics de- signed to improve a person's fitness while teaching self- defense techniques. Now the 28-year-old Southfield resident is reduc- ing his mental health work, training hard in kickbox- ing and teaching an in- creasing number of kaerobics students. Levy teaches at area health clubs, including the Maple/ Drake Jewish Com- munity Center, works with Ford Motor Co. executives, and children in the Dearborn Heights school district. "My main goal is getting into substance abuse centers, community mental health facilities . . . I've work- ed with a lot of people who are men- tally handicapped. And people that are on drugs. They spend their whole life looking for drugs. Here they come up to a (rehabilitation) place, they have nothing to do with their time. Exercise gives them a chance to fill that gap, give 'ern self-esteem and im- prove their physical fitness level. Give `em a natural way to relax, rather than using drugs." For now, Levy is content with the growth of his health club classes. At a recent CMI class, 10 stu- dents, eight of them women or girls, arrive in a downstairs workout room with mirrors on two walls. Levy puts them through stretching and light aerobics with mellow music in the background. The music gets bouncier as the exercise becomes more strenu- ous, as in any simple aerobics class. 90 FRIDAY,APRIL 1988 It soon becomes obvious that Levy is not teaching routine aerobics. As his students' feet bounce off of the wood floor in time with the music, Levy shows how to strike an oppo- nent's forehead with a palm. "This throws your opponent off balance and opens up the throat," he yells. Levy then starts hopping around the floor, demonstrating the various kaerobic self-defense moves. He shows how to escape an attack from behind, then grabs several students so they can perform the manuever. Levy repeats his messages, at times hammering them home like a drill seargent, at times simply yelling encouragement. He tells his students to do whatever is necessary in an emergency, stressing escape rather than confrontation. His techniques include punches, kicks and lethal moves from unusual sources. One mo- ment he demonstrates a kick he might use in the ring. The next mo- ment he thrusts his hand forward with index and middle fingers extend- ed and yells, "Two fingers to the eyes, Three Stooges!" Physical techniques are not the only skills Levy uses in his self- defense classes. He must use psychological techniques to put his students in an aggressive frame of mind. "I have to put them in that mode, in that frame of reference. It's embarassing to a person to walk in a class and do this at first. So I've got to give them permission. It's hard for them to publicly and openly do violent things. But once I've given them permission — for one hour, we're going to be violent, we're going to think self-defense — they soon get in- to it. I notice that the women especial- ly . . . are very co-ordinated. They're in good shape, they can deliver good punishment. And they get motivated to use it. They're scared of this rapist out there, they're scared of being hurt. So the attendance is picking up." Sometimes, though, Levy must take the opposite perspective. "I'm not stressing going out and getting in- to fights and learning how to fight people. I'm teaching how to escape, how to hit the right nerve center and get out. And street smarts. How to im- plement the technique. With my adolescents, I've got to be careful with them. I stress to them all the time, `This isn't for the street.' "Kids, they say, `Do you get in fights?' Because they want to see, the